Donald Trump, Kim Jong Un said to consider Sweden, Switzerland for meeting

Trump (right) dispatched CIA director Mike Pompeo to Pyongyang last month to meet with Kim (left). PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON (WASHINGTON POST) - Sweden and Switzerland are among the places the White House is considering for an unprecedented summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, according to people familiar with the matter.

Trump confirmed on Wednesday (April 18) that he dispatched CIA director Mike Pompeo to Pyongyang last month to meet with Kim in advance of the summit, which the US hopes will lead to North Korea giving up its nuclear arsenal.

The unannounced meeting indicates preparations are advancing for a summit that Trump said could take place by early June or sooner.

"Meeting went very smoothly and a good relationship was formed," Trump said in a Twitter post on Wednesday morning. "Details of Summit are being worked out now. Denuclearisation will be a great thing for World, but also for North Korea!"

Pompeo - who's awaiting confirmation as secretary of state - is the highest-ranking US official to visit the isolated nation since former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright in 2000. A White House official said Pompeo travelled to Pyongyang over Easter weekend, not "last week" as the president said in his tweet.

Trump told reporters on Tuesday that the administration had "started talking to North Korea directly" and was discussing five potential sites for the meeting.

"We have had direct talks at very high levels, extremely high levels with North Korea," Trump said, after meeting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

Remote video URL

Any summit would likely be the start of a long and potentially fraught process aimed at persuading Kim to give up North Korea's nuclear arsenal - something his family has held onto for decades as key to their grip on power at home and their only real external deterrent. A successful outcome might simply be an agreement for talks to continue and a plan for the next meeting.

Locations for the meeting include Geneva, an unnamed Swedish location, and venues in Asia and South-east Asia, people familiar with the talks told Bloomberg. One person said the US wasn't considering Beijing, Pyongyang, Seoul or Panmunjom, the site of the Korean armistice signing in 1953.

"It makes the proposed summit all the more likely to happen," said Suzanne DiMaggio, director and senior fellow at New America in New York, who facilitated the talks in Oslo that resulted in ailing US citizen Otto Warmbier's release from North Korea.

"It is reassuring that the Trump administration is taking serious steps to prepare for that historic interaction."

If Trump and Kim manage to establish a rapport, much like Trump's first meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, it could go a long way towards overcoming tensions around Pyongyang's missile and nuclear weapons tests and regular US military drills near the Korean peninsula.

Trump's aides believe that if the meeting leads to a thaw between the US and North Korea, which at points last year seemed at the brink of war, the president and Kim could win the Nobel Peace Prize.

The Pompeo trip is part of a global diplomatic scramble after Trump's March 8 decision to meet Kim to break the decades-long impasse over North Korea's nuclear weapons programme.

The clandestine visit is reminiscent of then National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger's secret diplomatic mission to Beijing in 1971. Those trips laid the groundwork for president Richard Nixon's unexpected visit to China the following year, which paved the way to opening up the country.

The Central Intelligence Agency chief arrived in North Korea just days after Kim returned from his own surprise visit to Beijing - his first trip outside the country since taking power in 2011. Bloomberg had earlier reported that a "very senior" US official spoke directly with Kim, bypassing third parties, citing a person familiar with the matter.

Direct US contact with Kim is "a pretty dramatic development," said Adam Mount, a senior fellow with the Federation of American Scientists. "Before the summit can happen, talks have to happen at a very high level" to set an agenda and other details, Mount said.

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said that Trump hasn't spoken directly with the North Korean leader. Pompeo, who earlier this year expressed a desire to "separate" North Korea from its regime, told senators considering his nomination as secretary of state last week that there was more room for diplomacy before considering military strikes.

News of Pompeo's meeting with Kim may boost Pompeo's chances at confirmation for secretary of state, which are shaky due to opposition from many Democrats and at least one Republican, Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky. Congress would be less likely to deliver a humiliating blow to Pompeo right at the moment he is Trump's point man on the North Korea talks.

Chuck Schumer, the Senate's top Democrat, didn't address Pompeo or his trip to meet with Kim Wednesday. But he was critical of the administration's efforts with a summit.

"So far we've seen no indication that North Korea intends to take concrete steps toward denuclearisation," Schumer said, adding that the Trump administration appears to be "buying a pile of magic beans".

South Korean President Moon Jae-in is scheduled to meet Kim at Panmunjom next week, the first trip south of the border by a North Korean leader.

Moon's planned April 27 encounter with Kim is expected to lay the ground for Trump's meeting. Trump said he had given Moon his "blessing" to negotiate a peace deal with North Korea, which never formally ended its war with South Korea after agreeing to end open hostilities 65 years ago.

The two sides are discussing plans to announce an official end to the war, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency reported on Wednesday, citing a senior presidential official. South Korea and the US would consider a peace treaty if Kim completely gives up his nuclear ambitions, the official said.

Trump suggested he was responsible not only for the negotiations on a formal peace treaty, but also the success of the Winter Olympics in South Korea. Kim's Jan 1 offer to cooperate with Moon on the Games set in motion a series of talks, trips and signals that culminated in Trump's decision to accept the summit.

"They've been very generous, that without us, and without me in particular, I guess, they wouldn't be discussing anything and the Olympics would have been a failure," Trump told reporters at Mar-a-Lago. "As you know, North Korea participated in the Olympics and it was really quite an Olympics. It was quite a success. That would not have happened."

Abe said Trump's "unwavering conviction, as well as his determination," have made talks with North Korea possible.

Trump agreed to raise the issue of Japanese citizens abducted by North Korea in the 1970s and 1980s, a key concern raised by Abe.

"We will bring up the abductees. We'll bring up many different things," Trump said. "I know that's been a very big factor for you."

Trump said he would meet with Kim in "early June or before that, assuming things go well."

"It's possible things won't go well and we won't have the meetings," Trump said. "And we'll just continue to go on this very strong path we have taken."

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.